HISTORY OF THE WAITAKERE CITY (WAITEMATA) ATHLETIC CLUB Contents The Early Days 1953 – 1982 (Page 1) The Second Stage 1982 – 1994 (Page 4) The Third Stage 1994 – 2002 (Page 7) The Agreement (Page 10) The Fourth Stage 2002 – 2008 (Page 14) THE EARLY DAYS - THE FIRST 30 YEARS - 1952 to 1982 The Waitemata Amateur Athletic Club, now the Waitakere City Athletic Club, was founded in 1952 by the late Mr George Searle. Mr Searle and his wife Florence had three sons and a daughter, all of whom were keen on sport. The boys played junior rugby at the Waitemata Rugby Club. The oldest son, Stuart, also showed considerable promise as an athlete at school. But there was no athletic club west of Henderson township in those days, the early 1950’s. So on 29th September 1952 Mr Searle held a public meeting at the YMCA Hall in Great North Road, Henderson with a proposal to form an athletic club based in Henderson. After a positive response at the meeting it was decided to form an athletic club and call it the Waitemata Amateur Athletic Club adopting the red, green and black colours of the Waitemata Rugby Club. At the club’s first executive meeting on 3rd October 1952, Mr Searle spoke about the advantages of the Club having a ground of its own. It was agreed to begin negotiations to rent, with a view to purchasing a property in Henderson known as Becrofts Orchard and owned by the Orange Hall Society. At a special general meeting held on 16th February 1953, an agreement was submitted by the Orange Hall Society regarding the purchase of the property in Rata Street. The terms of the agreement were that the rental of the land be £1 ($2) per week with the full purchase price being £2,000 ($4,000). A deposit of £500 ($1,000) was required with the balance to be paid three monthly at £80 ($160) per quarter over 5 years. It was passed unanimously that the club proceed with the purchase. The area of the land was just over five acres with a frontage of 25ft on Great North Road and a frontage of 401ft on Rata Street (now Ratanui Street) - where the Pak ‘N Save Supermarket now stands. A considerable amount of earthworks were necessary with the clearing, levelling and topsoil costing the club an additional £1,000 ($2,000). The Henderson Borough Council’s grader was hired for one afternoon at a cost of twelve pounds, ten shillings ($25) to cut the trenches in order to lay the drains. Tile drains were laid around the circumference of the ground by committee members. Two of the women committee members, Mrs Searle, wife of George Searle and Mrs Firth, recall being up to their hips in mud while laying the drains. 1 In 1953 a mammoth carnival was held at Smythe Park to raise money to pay for the ground. This was a massive undertaking for such a young club. It involved erecting stalls to sell cakes, fruit and other produce, a baby competition, pet show, coconut shies and other fund raising games and activities. The highlight of the carnival was a “death defying act” by Tom Bamfield who rode his bicycle through a wall of flame. Other entertainment included a cutlass swinging display by Royal New Zealand Navy personnel and renowned West Aucklander Peter Posa playing his guitar. The club also raised further money from regular Friday night raffles in Henderson township. With the ground fully paid for within the five year term, club members celebrated with a dinner at the Town and Country Roadhouse. Significantly, the Waitemata Amateur Athletic Club became the first athletic club in New Zealand to own its own ground. While the early club meetings were held at Smythe Park, near Henderson High School, the club moved to its new ground shortly after the completion of the earthworks. Among the original club committee members were the late Mr Rufus Gruebner, who served as president from 1953 until his death in 1977 and the late Mr Ray Price, who served on the committee for almost fifty years. With the land now paid for, the club committee then decided to raise further money to build a multi-purpose gymnasium on an embankment beside its athletic track. This time the main fund raising activity was a Queen Carnival, staged over ten weeks in late 1959. The club’s president, Mr Gruebner, was chairman of the organising committee. Three queens were chosen from the community – Miss Shirley Babich representing the Yugoslav community, Miss Glenis Bell, representing the Henderson business community and Miss Leone Beatt, representing the sports community. Each candidate had a large committee whose task it was to raise as much money as possible for their queen over the ten week period. The Yugoslav committee ran a number of social evenings for Miss Babich; the business committee raised several thousand dollars for Miss Bell through the sale of “Mystery Envelopes” throughout greater Auckland and the sports committee ran raffles, sports meetings and social evenings for Miss Beatt. Miss Babich narrowly won the competition raising £4,320 ($8,640) with Miss Bell, £1,259 ($8,519) a close second, and Miss Beatt, £3,196 ($6,392) third. Miss Babich was crowned overall Queen at a Grand Ball held at the Henderson R.S.A. on 12th December, 1959. In total, the Queen Carnival raised £11,775 ($23,550) which, in today’s terms, would represent over $500,000.00. Other fund raising activities included a car raffle with a black Holden as the main prize, gambling evenings using a crown and anchor board and Friday night raffles in the main street of Henderson township. The Government of the day, through the Ministry of Internal Affairs, also contributed a major grant to the Club, all of which enabled the gymnasium to be built debt free. 2 The estimated cost to build the gymnasium was £15,000 ($30,000). But with much voluntary labour from club members this was reduced considerably. Within twelve months the gymnasium was completed and officially opened - again a tribute to the foresight and sheer hard work of our early club members. This was the first multi-purpose indoor sports centre built in West Auckland and one of the first of its kind in New Zealand. The centre catered for a wide range of indoor sporting and recreational activities including basketball – the first stadium to cater for this sport west of Avondale College – badminton, gymnastics, weightlifting, judo, boxing, wrestling and even dancing classes. This was at a time when secondary schools in the area lacked gymnasium facilities and the club therefore met a major community need. While essentially a children’s club through the 1950’s and 1960’s, one immensely talented teenager emerged. He was Joe Antunovich, who won two national junior (under 19) discus titles in 1966 and 1967, one national junior shot title, in 1967, while in 1967 he raised the New Zealand junior discus record to 57.56m (1.5kg discus) which he held until 1975. Antunovich was later awarded an athletic scholarship to the University of Southern California and represented New Zealand in the discus at the 1970 Edinburgh Commonwealth Games. Antunovich was nicknamed “the Big Apple” by his athlete training mates as his parents owned and operated an apple orchard in Henderson. The teenage Antunovich spent much of his summer holidays picking and packing apples in his parent’s orchard. Through the 1970’s and early 1980’s the Waitemata Club grew from a strong children’s club into one of the most successful all round athletics clubs in New Zealand attracting top coaches and nurturing senior athletes to national and international class. One of the club’s first coaches was Mike Marston who was paid an expenses allowance and developed several teenage athletes in the sprints and middle distances to national class. Ross Dallow, Roy Williams and Russ Hoggard are other coaches who have contributed greatly to the club’s athletic successes over the last thirty years. In 1982 the Waitemata Club was proud to have three of its members represent New Zealand at the Commonwealth Games in Brisbane. They were Kim Robertson, the New Zealand 100m, 200m, and 400m champion and national 100m, 200m and 400m record holder, Janine Robson, the New Zealand 400m hurdles champion and record holder, and Pam Hendren, a former national long jump champion and record holder. 3 THE SECOND STAGE - 1982 to 1994 In the early 1980’s the membership of the Waitemata Club grew so rapidly that the Ratanui Street property (land and buildings) was becoming inadequate for a club of this size. The Henderson township was also developing very quickly and commercial land was becoming extremely scarce. In 1982 the club’s land was re-zoned for commercial use. The then Henderson Borough Council had offered the Waitemata Amateur Athletic Club $200,000.00 to purchase the club’s Ratanui Street land and buildings and re-locate the club at Henderson Park. The offer was turned down. The club’s Ratanui Street property was subsequently sold to commercial developers for $700,000.00. In 1982-83 the Waitemata Amateur Athletic Club negotiated with the Waitemata City Council to move to a new stadium where it would lease at a “peppercorn rental” an outdoor grass track and field stadium to be constructed by Council. The club would also construct a new indoor stadium of its own on adjoining land. Ross Dallow, a club coach and committee member, was appointed by the club as Project Director to re-locate the club and establish a building programme.
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